Has anyone successfully used the act for the purpose it is designed for please? Did the court action take forever to obtain the judgement? I'm about to get notified by my solicitor that we need to go to court to be able to cut the huge ivy growth on the flank wall growing up over the roof now. T I a
Access to neighbouring property act.
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I guess talking with the neighbour is not an option? Never done it, but I would imagine the judgement will state what the order is and when you can access on the grounds of the neighbour.
I hate Ivy, especially when it's growing on the property, it most likely will need re-pointing. Look into your insurance policy to see if your covered by damage by a neighbour.
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Where exactly is this wall
- A party wall built with consent and straddling the boundary (in this case I am not sure you have any rights as to what neighbour grows entirely within the bounds of their own property)
- Built right up to the boundary (in this case you have the right to cut the ivy at the boundary, i.e strip it off the wall)
- Built with a small gap to the boundary?
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Originally posted by Neelix View PostLegally you have right off access to undertake maintenance of your property, so surely the sand would apply to plants.
what Does the neighbour say about giving you access?
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And on every application you have to satisfy the court:
the court shall make *an* access order if, *and only if*, it is satisfied—
(a)that the works are reasonably necessary for the preservation of the whole or any part of the dominant land; and
(b)that they cannot be carried out, or would be substantially more difficult to carry out, without entry upon the servient land;
If resisted you may need to prove that the ivy is undesirable and that you cannot remove it in any other feasible manner (from your roof?). As also intimated in my "unapproved" posts it matters if this is one side of a party wall, and the attacked wall is actually over the boundary.
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Originally posted by ash72 View PostI guess talking with the neighbour is not an option? Never done it, but I would imagine the judgement will state what the order is and when you can access on the grounds of the neighbour.
I hate Ivy, especially when it's growing on the property, it most likely will need re-pointing. Look into your insurance policy to see if your covered by damage by a neighbour.
If this is not too controversial, I think if a man was involved in her side of things, we may have been able to sort it out but I am very concerned that if I say or do the"wrong thing" it could prove very awkward to say the least.
I'm paying solicitors to go down the legal route and have been lucky to find a proper garden maintenance firm insured to the hilt, who will do the job when access is granted............... whenever that is!
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Originally posted by Neelix View Posti only pointed this out because so many people don’t realise this.
so there’s no point in blocking access IMHO
In any case such court orders involve far more than a simple Yes or No. They involve the duration of access, method of access, what can be carried out, whether compensation for access might be due, compensation for damage caused.... and so on
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Originally posted by Plumbob View Post
I have asked the neighbour politely several times and so has my gardener but just got a tirade of foul language as apparently she doesn't want to look at the flank wall of my bungalow and prefers the ivy. I cannot access the area between the wall of the house and the boundary fence as it's only 500mm. House was built in 1923 and hers in 1925, so been there a while. She allowed my builder to replace soffits fascias and gutters in 2020 but refused to allow any ivy to be cut down.
If this is not too controversial, I think if a man was involved in her side of things, we may have been able to sort it out but I am very concerned that if I say or do the"wrong thing" it could prove very awkward to say the least.
I'm paying solicitors to go down the legal route and have been lucky to find a proper garden maintenance firm insured to the hilt, who will do the job when access is granted............... whenever that is!
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Originally posted by Neelix View Post
surely you can go down the gap side ways?
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Originally posted by Plumbob View Post
I have asked the neighbour politely several times and so has my gardener but just got a tirade of foul language as apparently she doesn't want to look at the flank wall of my bungalow and prefers the ivy.
Keep on with the legal route, i would caution though, because this is taking place, both parties will need to disclose this dispute if/when either houses come up for sale, at best it will knock the value down, at worse it will put off some buyers even offering
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